The Queen of Soul Honors America

Image result for image of aretha singing Star Spangled Banner

The above image will become clear when you hear the  Queen’s rendition  of the Star Spangled Banner last night at the hometown  game hosted by Miss Franklin’s Lions of Detroit.   She is 74 years old and still has her amazing voice.

Long live the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin !

 

 

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Native American’s Perspective on Thanksgiving

Image result for image of native american's perspective on Thanksgiving

It is important to tell the whole story.  The English who settled in what is now Massachusetts  did take the land, some of the natives into slavery and inadvertently spread European disease to the unsuspecting   people.  After I posted the traditional story of Thanksgiving, I was hit with being remiss in not including the Native American perspective.  I like  this video  bringing history and contemporary  thought together. They remember the story another way after 400 years.

Today,  with so much misunderstanding and hatred, I think it is important for me to remember that there are two sides to a story,  both 400 years ago and today.

Listen and learn from these First  American people!

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What is Thanksgiving Anyway?

Image result for image of first thanksgiving

My blogger friends from other countries have asked what exactly America is celebrating each year on the fourth Thursday in   November?  It is not just overeating , football , and Black Friday shopping which has made its way into Thursday  Thanksgiving Day at some stores eager to start the Christmas buying season.

It was started in the early years of our history in 1600s  in what is  now  known as Massachusetts. Today, enjoy your family dinner, watch some football, maybe even shop or plan your shopping for tomorrow. But also  remember our history, the Pilgrims, and  the kind and generous Indians,  add these  many things to others  of which you can  give thanks.

Now you know “The Rest of the Story” of Thanksgiving!

 

 

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Denial. . . . . . A Film

auschwitz, auschwitz-birkenau, death camp, gas chambers, nazi, the holocaust, concentration camps, extermination camp, world war II, crematorium I

This is a gas chamber in Auschwitz where gas tablets were dropped through the ceiling exterminating  up to 6,000 Jewish souls each day.  This was the largest work camp of the Third Reich  and located in Poland. The Germans built the majority of the Death Camps outside of Germany to hide them from the German people.

The sign over the gate says, Work Shall Set You Free.

When university professor Deborah E. Lipstadt includes World War II historian David Irving in a book about Holocaust deniers, Irving accuses her of libel and sparks a legal battle for historical truth. With the burden of proof placed on the accused, ( In the UK  the defeadent  has to prove his/her innocents, the opposite of the American legal system.  Lipstadt and her legal team fight to prove the essential truth that the Holocaust occurred. Based on the book “History on Trial: My Day in Court with a Holocaust Denier.”

This is a BBC produced and filmed production. It has no car chases or explosions. It is  thoughtfully written and acted script set  an London courtroom.  The  shots of the visitation to Auschwitz  are  black and white and viewed through the fog.  It is especially topical now with so many people on Face Book  “denying”  the existence of the  Holocaust.  This bent of  rewriting history  is” raising its evil head “all over the world.  Why is that so ?  Because of lack of exposure of history in the schools?  Denial?   Following the crowd?

 

Here  is a video of a survivor of Auschwitz where I have not visited.  We did go to Dachau near Munich. It was the first concentration camp established by the Nazis.  Jewish people were used to work  in the work camp and also subjected to medical experimentation. It was not officially a “Death Camp” but many Jewish people lost their lives figuratively and literally even if there were not gas chambers.

For me, being in Dachau, and  at the Slave Trade Forts in Ghana, and walking Normandy beaches  all three where death, pain, suffering beyond belief permeated the air.   Dachau had the same welcoming, ironic sign over the gate. . . Work Will Set You Free” as did Auschwitz.  As we walked into the grounds, there was a large stone table with groups of rocks piled on the top.  We learned it is a Jewish tradition to live rocks when visiting a the grave of a loved one.  David and I both wept as we left rocks above the engraved table.

NEVER AGAIN !

 

 

 

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Brian Mast Lost His Legs, But Successfully Ran for a Seat in Congress

Image result for image of Brian Mast at Walter Reed

Brian Mast is a double amputee who has successfully run for a seat for Congress from  Florida to continue his dedication and work for the United States. He ran successfully last week either on President Elect Trump’s coat tails or was it Trump winning Florida riding on Brian Mast’s coat tails?  What a hero!

 

 

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Ancient Stone Tablets

Image result for ancient stone tablets auctioned

This is an image of the world’s oldest complete stone inscription of the Ten Commandments.  It is a national treasure in Israel.  The stone is  a foot square marble slab which weights 115 pounds and was an   Ancient Biblical Archaeology artifact.  It was sold in auction last night for $850,000. The sale was to use the revenue  for other more hands on artifacts for visitors to the museum.

The tablet is inscribed with the  ancient script of the Samaritans.  It is thought that this tablet adorned the entrance of a synagogue destroyed by the Romans AD 400-600 or by the crusades  in the 11 century.  Because of changes the Samaritans made in the religion, the Israelites  regarded it as apostasy to Judaism.  The Samaritans eliminated  the commandment #4 of not taking the Lord’s name in vain and  replaced it with a commandment to worship on Mount Gerizm.   The Hebrew people considered the Samaritans to be “pagan half -Jews.”

Christ used  the Samaritan  as  an example of a  good neighbor  in his parable .

The parable of the Good Samaritan is a didactic story told by Jesus in Luke 10:25–37. It is about a traveler (who may or may not have been a Jew) who is stripped of clothing, beaten, and left half dead alongside the road. First a priest and then a Levite comes by, but both avoid the man. Finally, a Samaritan comes by.

The Ten Commandments are listed twice in the Hebrew Bible, first at Exodus 20:1–17, and then at Deuteronomy 5:6–21. Both versions state that God inscribed them on two stone tablets, which he gave to Moses on Mount Sinai.

“The sale of this tablet does not mean it will be hidden away from the public. The new owner is under obligation to display the tablet for the benefit of the public.

The tablet lists nine of the 10 commonly known commandments, leaving out “Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain” (King James translation), and adding one often employed by the Samaritan sect, encouraging worshipers to “raise up a temple” on Mount Gerizm, the holy mountain of the Samaritans, according to Heritage Auctions.”

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Group of U-Va. students, faculty ‘deeply offended’ by Thomas Jefferson being quoted at school he founded

 Image result for image of the Rotunda UVA

Growing up in Virginia and having a long family legacy of students attending Mr. Jefferson’s university, this  is more than startling.  Even during the late 60s and early 70s during that dark period of Vietnam and the invasion of Cambodia,  when my husband was in Charlottesville,  there, were demonstrations and civil disobedience, but nary a word against Mr. Jefferson. Not that he was revered as a god but probably a demi-god due to his many accomplishments, talents and great wisdom. The story of Sally Hemmings was out there and of course that he had been a slave owner. Both failings of a mortal man, but he was still appreciated for the  amazing contributions he made to the young country including building U-VA.  Maybe it was a knowledge that no man is perfect or without fault and mistakes but still having  an understanding that  good can be praised, without excusing the failures.

It is hard to imagine that students and faculty are criticizing  using Mr. Jefferson’s words and writing , but I guess  this is a different time and place. But  I must say, it is  almost impossible to believe  that this would ever happen  at U-VA. . . . .

November 15 The Washington Post 

In 1819, well after helping to found the United States of America, Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.

It was the state’s first true public university.

Known as the “Father of the University of Virginia,” Jefferson was laid to rest at his home in Monticello, less than 10 miles from his school.

Jefferson embodied the contradictions of his time. He was a slave owner, who wrote “all men are created equal” in the Declaration of Independence. But Martin Luther King Jr., for example, regularly evoked Jefferson’s words in his speeches. On Sept. 12, 1962, King spoke at the New York Civil War Centennial Commission’s Emancipation Proclamation Observance in New York City. There he said, “Jefferson with keen perception saw that the festering sore of slavery debilitated white masters as well as the Negro. He feared for the future of white children who were taught a false supremacy. His concern can be summed up in one quotation, ‘I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.’”

Now, a group of students and faculty members at the very school Jefferson founded have chastised the university president for quoting him in a statement she made after the election of Donald Trump.

Following Trump’s victory, University President Teresa Sullivan sent an email urging students to remember their own responsibility in the world, the Cavalier Daily reported.

Sullivan wrote, “By coincidence, on this exact day 191 years ago — November 9, 1825, in the first year of classes at U.Va. — Thomas Jefferson wrote to a friend that University of Virginia students ‘are not of ordinary significance only: they are exactly the persons who are to succeed to the government of our country, and to rule its future enmities, its friendships and fortunes.’ I encourage today’s U.Va. students to embrace that responsibility.”

It wasn’t the first such email quoting Jefferson that Sullivan had written to the student body. As The Washington Post’s Susan Svrluga reported, a week earlier she sent one out after someone scrawled the word “terrorists” on the door of a dorm room where two Muslim students resided.

In that letter, Sullivan advocated peace on campus, writing, “Thomas Jefferson was the first American president to wrest power from an opposing party, yet he also provided a potent precedent for the peaceful transfer of power and the healing of a divided nation.”

With the second email, a contingent of the campus decided they’d had enough.

Assistant Professor of Psychology Noelle Hurd drafted an open letter addressed to the school’s president “to provide [Sullivan] with some constructive and respectful feedback regarding [her] messages.” This email denounced her usage of quotations by Jefferson, the school’s founder, due to the fact that he was a slaveholder.

Four hundred and sixty-nine students and faculty members signed the letter.

The letter read, in part:

We are incredibly disappointed in the use of Thomas Jefferson as a moral compass. Thomas Jefferson owned hundreds of slaves. Other memorable Jefferson quotes include that Blacks are “inferior to the whites in the endowments of body and mind,” and “as incapable as children of taking care of themselves.” Though we realize that some members of our university community may be inspired by quotes from Jefferson, we also realize that many of us are deeply offended by attempts on behalf of our administration to guide our moral behavior through their use.

It stated that, “although some members of this community may have come to this university because of Thomas Jefferson’s legacy, others of us came here in spite of it.”

Finally it stated, “For many of us, the inclusion of Jefferson quotes undermines the messages of unity, equality, civility, and inclusivity that you are attempting to convey.”

“The intention of the email was to start a conversation with our administration regarding ways to be more inclusive,” Hurd told the Cavalier Daily. “In the current climate, we must seize every opportunity to communicate that this university welcomes individuals from all backgrounds.”

Politics professor Lawrie Balfour, who also signed the letter, said that a simple mention of Jefferson is enough to undo progress — a cycle that’s oft repeated during her decade and a half with the school.

“I’ve been here 15 years,” Balfour told the Cavalier Daily. “Again and again, I have found that at moments when the community needs reassurance and Jefferson appears, it undoes I think the really important work that administrators and others are trying to do.”

Sullivan quickly responded on Monday with a letter that reaffirmed the university’s “long-standing tradition of open discourse” in which she wrote, “I fully endorse their right to speak out on issues that matter to all of us, including the University’s complicated Jeffersonian legacy.”

“In my message last week, I agreed with Mr. Jefferson’s words expressing the idea that UVA students would help to lead our Republic. He believed that 200 years ago, and I believe it today,” Sullivan wrote, continuing to state this doesn’t indicate that she agrees with all of the man’s actions, thoughts or politics.

In her response to a letter asking her not to quote Jefferson, Sullivan continued to, indeed, defiantly quote Jefferson.

She wrote:

UVA is still producing leaders for our Republic, and from backgrounds that Mr. Jefferson could not have anticipated in 1825, when he wrote the words that I quoted. Today’s leaders are women and men, members of all racial and ethnic groups, members of the LGBTQ community, and adherents of all religious traditions. All of them belong at today’s UVA, whose founder’s most influential and most quoted words were “ . . . all men are created equal.” Those words were inherently contradictory in an era of slavery, but because of their power, they became the fundamental expression of a more genuine equality today.

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The Arrival. . . . .a film

Image result for images of THE ARRIVAL

 

“Linguistics professor Louise Banks (Amy Adams) leads an elite team of investigators when gigantic spaceships touch down in 12 locations around the world. As nations teeter on the verge of global war, Banks and her crew must race against time to find a way to communicate with the extraterrestrial visitors. Hoping to unravel the mystery, she takes a chance that could threaten her life and quite possibly all of mankind.”

We loved Sicario also directed by  Denis Villeneuve which you may have seen.  The films are quite different but both thoughtful and thought provoking with a   believable twist taking you into the director’s mind.

I was resistant as I don’t like aliens and space films. I don’t like to suspend reality.  As I have said before, I get fiction but am not a fan  of fantasy and monsters. ” The Arrival” was more in the vein of “Independence Day” at the beginning of the story when the audience feel the suspense and mystery of what is happening with the characters.  Then when the aliens arrived , it lost me.  “The Arrival” is different in that it all does seem possible  which was a surprise.   The hype is quite true.  It is  thoughtful and the story gets in your head in spike of the slow pace.  The “ship” is quite amazing visually.

Image result for images of THE ARRIVAL

My take was that the story was a metaphor and David got something  quite different!   (Sorry, I don’t want to ruin the story for you!)  But as we shared, we decided that  both were true to the plot and characters.   Who knows maybe there is even another take away.

I read on the net that “The Arrival” is this generation’s “Close Encounters”  which I actually enjoyed too.   I would say it will have multi-generational appeal.  PG 13 and appropriate for children.   **** stars out of *****

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How the Election Unfolded

A wave of disillusionment and anger — wide and by all appearances intensely felt — secured the presidency Tuesday for Donald Trump.

 A wave of disillusionment and anger — wide and by all appearances intensely felt — secured the presidency Tuesday for Donald Trump. He won by turning out victories in a wide swath of the United States, a base of support broad enough to secure him a strong majority in the Electoral College even though he lost the popular vote.

Republican Red

Democrat  Blue

 Source: Associated Press, as of 4:30pm EST, Note: Alaska does not report county-level results.

TRUMP WON THE ELECTION BECAUSE:

Republican growth

He benefited from an eight-year shift toward the Republican Party. Comparing the margin of victory to the 2012 election, we can see that Trump outperformed Mitt Romney heavily in large portions of the country. The places where Hillary Clinton improved on President Obama’s 2012 numbers, while often populous, were insufficient to give her the votes to clinch victory in battleground states.

Looking back even further, compared to the 2008 election, this trend is even more pronounced, as many counties, even traditionally liberal ones, have moved significantly to the right over the past 8 years. This map shows how Trump improved on John McCain’s margins in 2008.

Source: Associated Press, as of 4:30pm EST, Note: Alaska does not report county-level results.

Rust Belt connection

Trump connected with voters in key portions of the Rust Belt which was the location of four key states that would be won or lost by thin margins: Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

 Source: Associated Press, as of 4:30pm EST, Note: Alaska does not report county-level results.

Manufacturing counties

Republican support in counties with the highest percent of the working population in manufacturing jobs.

And areas with large decreases in unemployment

Republican support in counties with the largest decreases in unemployed popula- tion rates from 2010 to 2014.

CLINTON LOST THE ELECTION BECAUSE:

Lower turnout in predominantly black areas and Democratic bastions

Percent change in voter turnoutSource: Associated Press, as of 4:30pm EST, Note: Alaska does not report county-level results.

Fewer Hispanics supported Clinton

Percentage of Hispanic voter support going to Democratic presidential candidates:

The education gap

Exit polls revealed a nation deeply divided. Men and those without a college education went strongly for Trump. Women and those who had a degree backed Clinton.

EXIT POLLS

What drove their votes

It wasn’t the economy that drove voters’ decision this year. Instead, it was distaste — and often anger — at the way the fed- eral government is doing its job, and a deep sense that the USA is headed in the wrong direction. That was enough for voters to throw their support behind a first-time candidate who many of his sup- porters said they did not like or trust, or who they judged unfit to hold the office.

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Jeffersonian Democracy

Image result for image of Jeffersonian democracy

 

The Jeffersonians were deeply committed to Republicanism in the United States, which meant opposition to aristocracy of any form, opposition to corruption, insistence on virtue, with a priority for the “yeoman farmer“, “planters“, and the “plain folk”. They were antagonistic to the aristocratic elitism of merchants, bankers and manufacturers, distrusted factory workers, and were on the watch for supporters of the dreaded British system of government.   from Wikipedia

Today, as President Obama hosts President- Elect Trump to visit the White House, the world is observing  the beginning of the   “peaceful transfer of power in the United States” between two very different views, parties, and men. They agree in their  love  the United States. The meeting between the two was scheduled for 30 minutes and already it has lasted over 1 hour.  Hopefully, this meeting will serve as a signal to both our country and the world  that no matter how divisive the election has been , we are all Americans and now must work together. 

I can’t help but think, Mr. Jefferson  would be pleased with both the results of the election and this  civil meeting between adversaries.

Power to the People. . . . . 

 

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